1631–1678) was an English soldier, known as an agitator and theological writer.
[1] With 60 others, he was arrested at a religious meeting in London in January 1641 at the house of Richard Sturges.
[2] He was a prisoner of war in 1642 in Oxford Castle, and wrote a pamphlet on the terrible conditions of his confinement, against William Smith.
[5] He was on the army's General Council in 1647, and a supporter of the Levellers.
[6] Jason Peacey writes of …informal networks of Puritan activists on the radical Protestant fringe … who were particularly involved in the advancement and propagation of particular religious visions, and explicitly concerned with spreading their message through the medium of print and through 'conspiratorial' publications.